264 Mr. Martin Jacoby’s List of the Phytophagous 
Hab. St. Vincent—Kingstown, Leeward side; Grenada 
—Balthazar (Windward side), Mount Gay Estate (Leeward 
side). 
This Systena differs from most of its allies in the 
coloration of the elytra and their regular punctuation ; 
the thorax also has no indication of a transverse groove ; 
and the posterior femora are not strongly thickened. In 
many specimens the dark basal and apical portions of the 
elytra are connected by a similarly-coloured narrow 
sutural stripe, leaving an elongate flavous spot or band 
at the sides. 
PsevDOEPITRIX, Jac. 
Pseudoepitrix suffriani, sp. n. 
Elongate, flavous ; antenne long, joints 5—7 black; thorax 
subquadrate, with a deep transverse sulcus, impunctate ; elytra 
with a sub-basal depression, strongly punctate-striate. 
Length, ? line. 
Head perpendicular, impunctate; the frontal tubercles strongly 
raised, subquadrate, nearly contiguous ; lower portion of the face 
concave, formed of a single piece ; antenne extending nearly to 
the apex of the elytra, flavous, the basal joint long, strongly 
thickened at the tip, the second short, thick, the third slightly 
shorter than the fourth, the fifth, sixth, and seventh joints black, 
these and the following joints slender, elongate, not thickened ; 
thorax one-half broader than long, narrowed at the base, the sides 
rounded anteriorly, the disc transversely convex, with a deep, 
sinuate, transverse sulcus near the base, extending nearly to the 
sides and punctured within, the basal margin slightly produced at 
the middle ; elytra much wider at the base than the thorax, with 
a distinct transverse depression, the basal portion rather raised, 
the shoulders prominent, closely and strongly punctate-striate, the 
punctures extending to the base and distinct nearly to the apex ; 
posterior tibize with a small spur; posterior metatarsus as long as 
the following two joints together; prosternum narrow, impunc- 
tate ; anterior coxal cavities closed. 
Hab. St. Vincent. 
This insect differs from the two species from Panama 
included by me under the generic name Pseudoepitrix 
(Biol. Centr.-Am., Col., vi., 1, p. 341) in having the first 
joint of the antennz more elongate and the thoracic 
